Team:Washington/Gram Positive/Design
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==Using FoldIt to Make CapD_CP a Better Hydrolase== | ==Using FoldIt to Make CapD_CP a Better Hydrolase== |
Revision as of 00:36, 30 September 2010
Making CapD a Better Anthrax Treatment
There are two main obstacles limiting natural CapD as an Anthrax therapeutic. First, natural CapD is a difficult to express dimer, requiring an auto-cleavage to activate. Second, CapD is a better transpeptidase than poly-γ-D-glutamate hydrolase, limiting its Anthrax decapsulating potential. To solve the first problem, we created a circular permuted, monomeric version of CapD that is easy to express and quantify. To improve hydrolysis, we used FoldIt, a computational toolbox, to design active site mutations aimed to increase hydrolysis over transpeptidation.
Circular Permutation of CapD
When natural CapD is first translated, the key catalytic threonine residue is buried in the active site, inaccessible to poly-γ-D-glutamate. After auto-cleavage, this critical threonine becomes the new N terminus, which can take its place in the active site. By reordering the protein so the threonine is the first residue, and putting a FoldIt designed linker between the natural N and C terminus, we make a circular permutation of CapD that we named CapD_CP. CapD_CP is a monomer, historically easier to purify and more stable than dimers.
Since the first residue of any nascent protein must be methionine, we rely on E. Coli’s naturally occurring methionine aminopeptidase to remove the first methionine, making CapD_CP catalytically active. The removal of the first methionine has been verified via mass spectrometry.
Using FoldIt to Make CapD_CP a Better Hydrolase
To increase the hydrolytic ability of CapD_CP, we made point mutations to the active site. We focused our attention on two types of mutations. First, we created point mutations that can establish hydrogen bondings to a modeled transition state of our substrate in an attempt to lower the activation energy, making hydrolysis more favorable. Second, we mutated the active site into a more open and polar area in an attempt to increase the ease with which water can enter and participate in a hydrolysis reaction.To make these point mutations, we used a computer program named FoldIt to predict how changes in protein structure and composition will affect protein stability. FoldIt provides a 3D representation of a protein's crystal structure that can be manipulated. Manipulation functions include point mutations, insertions, deletions, repacking of side chains (rotamer optimization), and backbone movement, which FoldIt then assesses for stability. This allows the user to quickly interact with a protein and easily predict how mutations will affect a protein.
A more in depth explanation of FoldIt here.